PAGK 8 TIIE CITIZEX, WEDNESDAY HAY 31, 1011. THE COUNTY BETHANY. Special to The Citizen. IlKTHANV, May 27 Miss Alta Mnny Is spending the week at Tyler II111 and Fallsdale. Mrs. J. II. Cody spent last Sun day in Scranton. Rov. J. B. Cody camo Thursday to see his friend, Mr. Egen, who Is visiting at the manse. Mrs. J. V. Starnes had a very se vere attack of pleural pneumonia but Is Improving. Dr. Powell and "Vlnlng Cody are In attendance. Her daughters, Blanche and Mrs. Noyes, I of Honesdale, have been with her the past week. I Mr. Elsenhorger. the Princeton student, who Is In charge of the Presbyterian church here, at Promp-I ton and Waymart, left for Prompton to locate Thursday as It Is more cen tral for his work. Tho supper in the Presbyterian dining room was liberally attended the amount raised being about four dollars. Mrs. George Hauser and Fred Ilauser spent Friday at the Fltze home in Whites Valley. .Mrs. M. E. Bolkcom, Honesdale, Is spending Sunday with her broth er and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Faatz. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Clemo, a daughter on Friday. Miss V. Halsoy and Miss Gilchrist will leave Monday to visit relatives and friends In Wilkes-Barre and Kingston. They expect to take in the aviation meet. STERLING. Special to The Citizen. STICKLING, Pa., May lil) William Shaffer, Canaan, is moving into O. B. Megargle's house. On the evening of May 19, about thirty-flve of Miss Ada Simons' young friends helped her celebrate her twentieth birthday. A few very pleasant hours were passed. Mrs. I. Gilpin, Kellam, and son, Dunmore, aie guests of M. A. Gil pin's. Miss A. M. Noble has a young lady assisting her in cleaning house. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Noble, Arling ton, spent a day in town this week. On the -7th Mrs. S. N. Cross and daughter, Mrs. W. B. Lesher, and children, went to Wilkes-Barre and spent two days at Rev. D. Evans" and then .Mrs. Cross returned and Mrs. Lesher and children went to Wash ington, N. J., where they will spend a couple of weeks with New Jersey friends. There was preaching at Jericho last Sunday and we think there will be every other Sunday for some time. Last Sunday Rev. Williams preach ed a memorial sermon and on Me morial Day Attorney C. P. Searle, Honesdale, will deliver an address. MOUNTAIN HOME. Special to The Citizen. MOUNTAIN' HOMH, Pa., .May Olive Martin is visiting her sister of Mountain Home. Mr. Edington is improving slowly. Mrs. George Shelter Is able to be out again. Mrs. George Jones called on her mother Thursday. Mrs. Compton was a pleasant caller at Mrs. George Edlngton's last week. Miss Marie Mutcher spent last week with friends at Mountain Home. Miss Meta Place entertained friends from Florida last week. Mrs. Fannie Place has gone to Pocono Inn as housekeeper this sea son. Mt. Pocono M. E. church was struck by lightning last Wednesday evening. Miss Lena French is Improving slowly and will soon be able to re turn home again. Miss Loys Edington spent Sun day with her grandparents, .Mr. and Mrs. Mart Mutoher. PAUPACK. Special to The Citizen. PAUPACK, Pa., May 21) .Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Killam left this place on Monday for a trip to Camden, N. J. The box party which was held at H. Gumble's on Saturday last was a success. Proceeds about ?15. William Martin and family, Ledge dale, spent Sunday In this place. Mr. Healy Is having garden made on the Bennett farm which the Water company have purchased. Miss Frances Killam returned home on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. F. Gilpin, who were spending last week at Greentown with Mr. Gilpin's mother, who is very ill, returned to their home at Hawley on Monday. Fred Haussman Is employed by Walter Vetterleln. .Miss Walter returned to her home at Newfoundland last Friday, after spending a time at this place. HAWLEY. Special to Tho Citizen. IIAWLKV, l'u., May 21) Miss Wetzel spent tho latter part of last week In the Electric City. Mrs. Nellie Caruth and daughters went to Wilkes-Barre on Saturday. They will bo present at tho aviation meet in that city on Memorial Day. William James, East Orange, call ed on his brother, Samuel, and fam ily of this place between trains last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank White, Grav ity, were shopping In town on Thursday. Erasmus Ames, Dunmore, was call ing on relatives here Saturday. Miss Lela Atkinson, a trained nurse of New York, has arrived for her anniial vacation. George Hlttlnger, who was recent ly Injured in a runaway accident, was able to be taken In an auto to his home on Long Ridge Friday. August Buck, Scranton, was a Sun day visitor here. Mrs. Miles Wilds will soon leave for an extended visit at Schenectady. N. Y. Mrs. George Haas and little son, New York City, are being entertained at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gottlelb Matter, of Bollemont avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Daniels have moved from the Murray farm on Cherry Ridge to Wllsonvllle where ho Is employed in the lumber woods. Miss Bussie Williams and Miss Anna Hausman will open a dress making establishment on Main ave nue in rooms over H. Harmes' law office this week. Lillian Townsend, one of Uncle Sam's obliging distributors of malls In the local postoflice, had her face quite badly burned by using a hand kerchief on which was carbolic acid, unknown to tho user. Leonard Degrote, who resides on Bellemonte Hill, was taken to a hos pital in Scranton Friday. He has been a sufferer of rheumatic trouble the greater part of tho Winter. While taking a short walk recently he fell and as was thought at the time slightly strained one leg. Of late this member caused him so much pain that his doctor, A. H. Catterall, found upon close examination that his leg was broken and required hos pital attention. The High School Alumni, for which oxtcnslvo preparations havo been made will banquet In the Audi torium this Friday. Main Avenue and one block on Ponn Avenue and Church street was oiled during the week. May the good work continue is tho general wish. The Odd Fellows and Rebekahs of this place will observe their Memor ial day, which occurs on the 13th of June, by decorating the graves of their brothers and sisters and exercises in the lodge rooms. A load of guests arrived on the Saturday evening train bound for East Lynn of Tafton to pass the Memorial Day vacation. Miss Knthryn, daughter of J. F. Drake and wife, has been awarded third honor at the East Stroudsburg Normal school where she will grad uate next month. This is consider ed excellent work, since she has only been at the Normal little more than a year and a half. William Porter, a member of tho stock exchange of Dickson, Perkins & Co., who was seriously injured In an automobile accident near Pater son, N. J., Monday, May 22, Is the husband of a former Hawley girl whose maiden name was Ruth Alice Cole. Mrs. George Kohlman leaves this Monday to enjoy a fortnight's recrea tion In tho metropolis and other near by cities. She will also take a trip hp the Hudson. Mrs. W. S. Peterson is slightly in disposed at this writing. The Y. P. S. of tho Lutheran church will meet in the church base ment Thursday, June 1. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Murphy spent Sunday at their summer cottage at Woodside. T. J. Burke, Scranton, was in town Saturday. C. D. Simpson, Scranton, L. B. Stillwell, New York City, and sever al of the promoters of the big dam to be built at Wilsonville, held a meeting at Park View Hotel on Fri day. Mr. Still came to decide on the exact location where the dam will be built. It is rumored that It will go across just below the Wilsonville bridge. Lon Bidwell, Arlington, is among the number who will finish the course at West Chester Normal School this Spring. The annual literary contest held at the High school building on Fri day night proved to bo an interesting affair. The stage was profusely decked with flowers and a conspicu ous motto which read: "Impossible is Unamerlcan." Six pupils recited three girls and three boys. Harriet McAndrow and Edward Dapper were the winners of the five dollar gold pieces. The other contestants were Norman Swingle, Abe Harris, Mabel Tuthill and Sylvia Rodman. The judges were Herman Harmos, County Superintendent J. J. Koehler and Prof. A. H. Howell. Other features of the evening was a song and drill by the primary regiment which was well rendered. Vice Principal Marts gave an exhibition in Indian Club swinging. George Kehr, Long Ridge, lost a valuable horse on Friday. Miss Georgie Teeter, representative of Wallen-Paupack Council of Poca hontas, attended the great council of thnt order assembled at Philadelphia on Tuesday of last week. F. H. McDonough, liveryman, has moved his family from River street in rooms over R. T. Warg's shoe store A young son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gelsler is now crippled In both feet. From an accident a few days ago to ono of his feet blood poison set in and while still very sore he In some way gashed the other with a hatchet. THE DICIOAI) OF PREMATURE BURIAL. Gustav Mahler, who died the oth er day, Is said to havo requested that Ids heart be pierced 'with a needle in order to assure tho fact of death beyond tho possibility of a doubt. The public only hears of such a re quest when it Is made by some person of prominence, and if tho truth could be ascertained it would probably lie found that tho dread of a premature burial Is widely pre valent. It may bo an unreasonable dread, but It unquestionably exists to a very considerable extent, nor Is it confined to Ignorant or sensi tive or foolishly imaginative per sons. Harriet Martlneau, tho fam ous writer and philosopher was a particularly clear-headed and strong-minded person whom no ono would accuse of being fanciful, and yet she loft instructions by will that her body be decapitated before in terment and she bequeathed fifty dollars to the doctor who should perform the gruesome operation. Another well-known woman who was similarly obsessed was Lady Burton, wife and widow of tho dis tinguished Orientalist and explorer. She so greatly feared the possibility of a prematuro burial that she on Joined the piercing ot her heart be fore her death was so much as cer tified and ordered that her body be subsequently subjected to a post mortem examination. Still another who took a like precaution was Ed mund Yates, author of various nov els which had a great sale forty years or so ago, even though they are now forgotten. Yates ordered by will tnat his jugular vein be severed and ho covered the cost of the operation by a bequest of $100. 'these are a tew illustrations of tnis distressing apprehension which have come to the general knowledge and it is likely that any doctor whoso practice has been extended could out of his own experience add many others to the list. People dread being burled alive because no Imagination can con ceive a more awful fate and be cause every once in a while It is reported that, some coffin having been opened, the disposition of the oody within it exhibited indications ot a struggle. The feeling is that as such an examination is exceed ingly rare there is no telling how frequently tho same thing may have happened in the millions of cases wnich have been unobserved. Of course, the chance of a premature burial is so remote as not to bo worth taking into account. To the expert eye the signs of death are uoth unmistakable and infallible, and even where there have been In dications of movement succeeding inhumation it does not follow that there was a conscious struggle. Yet the npprehenslon is one which reason is powerless to remove and no argument will so effectually re lieve those whom it affects as the taking of some appropriate precau tion. Philadelphia Inquirer. Get Rid Of Flies and Mosquitoes. A Philadelphia correspondent re cently wrote to Prof. H. A. Surface, State Zoologist, as follows: "Will you kindly send me inform ation regarding the prevention of Hies and mosquitoes. I have a stable in the rear of my property, back of which there is a manure pile. I think the Hies breed here, and have been told that If I mix lime with it the dies will be killed. The mosquitoes breed, I think, in sever al ponds that are near the house. Any Information furnished by you will bo greatly appreciated." The Professor's reply was as fol lows: "The habits of flies and mosqui toes are quite different, and I must discuss each separately. "Of course, you know there are many different species of Hies, and the breeding habits of each differ considerably. However, I presume you refer to the one commonly known as the House fly or Typhoid fly. This pest passes the winter gen erally as a mature or adult Insect in some place of concealment or pro tection, or even as a pupa or chry salis in or near the place where it fed as a larva. "In the early part of the summer It commences to lay its eggs, chiefly In manure, either In stables them selves, or around the manure piles. Any kind of filth or decaying organic matter may serve as a place for the laying of the eggs, and also for tho development of the young. Within a few days after laying, they hatch, and the young larvae or maggots come forth to live upon the organic matter they can find. They develop into white worms, which in a short time transform into brown pupae or chysallds, and in a few days these split open and the winged fly comes forth. "The best means of suppressing the fly nuisance is to be clean up the breeding places absolutely. This de mands unusual care. As an aid to this, nothing is better than the lime sulfur solution, made by boiling lime and sulfur together, and diluting it just the same as is directed in our bulletins and circulars from time to time for spraying for the San Jose scale. In other words, boil one pound of lime with two pounds of sulfur in one gallon of water for one hour. This is a strong solution that can be kept. It can also be pur chased as a commercial lime-sulfur solution, sold by most seedsmen and many hardware dealers. Dilute one gallon of this with seven or eight gallons of water, and sprinkle It or spray it abundantly around the prem ises. It is not only a contact in secticide, but it is also a good germ icide. It is the best treatment that, can be given for the interior of poultry houses, cow stables, horse stables, pig pens, ets. However, muddy or soft ground should not be soaked with it, and then oblige tho animals to wade through it to any great extent, as it will gradually in jure their feet, If they must stand or walk in It for any great length of time. "If tho stable Is cleaned out thor oughly and swept once each week, it will be sufficient to provide against the breeding of the house fly or ty phoid fly at that particular place. "Mosquitoes breed in water, as you suggest. It is remarkable what a small quantity of water may be suf ficient to cause enough of these pests to be very annoying to several families. Sometimes an old tin can or a water bucket or a post hole left stand with water In It, will be suffi cient to give the breeding place to hundreds or thousands of these pests. A thin film of oil on top of tho water will immediately destroy them. "Ono should look around tho premises and see if there aro any old vessels containing water, and if so, either empty them, or put a fow spoonfuls of oil on them. Drains. sinks and cisterns should be kept covered with netting, and thus be mosquito-proof. Oil on water would not injure It, although stock would not come to it to drink the water wmie the oil was on It. If ono should, for example, have a watering tub In which mosquitoes are breed ing, it Is best to pour In a few spoonfuls of oil, and let this snread. and kill the pests, which it will do within much less than one hour. Then with some vessel like a bucket ho can skim off the oil and throw It away. ' We can scarcely hope to extermin ate the House fly, but if we reduce its numbers and suppress it, we will be doing a good thing for ourselves anu neignuors. W. C. SPRY AUCTIONEER HOLDS SALES ANYWHERE IN STATE. TO SUCCEED, OBEY E. Hubbard Says He Al ways Gets His "THE ONLY REAL NEUTRAL IN THIS GAME OF LIKE IS A DEAD ONE." True, Terese, I'm well turned ilfty. And what I told you five years ago still holds good; I have never had a sick day In my life and never took a dose of medicine. 1 have ridden horse3 all my life and have never been thrown but of course I do not let the other fellow pick my mounts. Also, chee-lld, look you, I haven't an enemy in the world that I recognize as such. My enemies aro simply good people who do not un derstand me. This is this misfor tune. If they injure me in some ways, they more than make up for it in advertising, so 1 am the gainer by their gall. I've traveled on railroad-trains for forty years in this country and in Europe and I've never been robbed nor mistreated. I never had a chewing-match with a railroad man nor a hotel employee. While the other fellow is howling and calling bad names he didn't get any pie, the waiter brings me two nice quarter sections that I didn't even suggest, save in a telegraphic way. I always get mine and a little more. Kindness and love have been my portion. 1 never had a banker or anybody else refuse me a loan of money or anything. Once on an early train near Wich ita, Kansas, I made a reach for my pocketbook when the conductor en tered and yelled, "Tickets, every body!" I reached for my faithful walletoskl, I repeat, and it wasn't there. I had left it under my pil low at the hotel. In desperation I looked around to see If 1 knew any one in that car. Alas! Not a soul was there I had ever seen before. Opposite me was a freckled party with a derby cock ed over his eye at a vicious angle. In his buttonhole modestly gleamed tho little gold antlers of the Elks. Without a second thought I reached over and said, "Hey, you, Bill, loan me five dollars." He glanced at me lazily, and reaching in his trousers brought up a big, greenish roll. He skimmed off a five, and as he handed it to me he said, "Yes, brother, sure; and if there Is any change, get your hair cut." And the pocketbook? Yes, the freckled little Elk told the con ductor, who was also an antlered buck, to telegraph back and get that leather. That evening a smoky, smudgy, greasy, locomotive fireman walked into the hotel and gave me my pocketbook. Not a card or a postage-stamp was missing, and the one hundred sixty-five dollars in good bills was there Just as I had left it. I offered the fireman a V. He smiled and refused to touch it. All he wanted was a' copy of The Philistine with my name written to it. "You have done so much for the railroad boys they all shout for you," said the greasy one. Of course I haven't done anything for them. But I would like to. I love the boys the section men, the track-walkers, flagmen, engin eers the folks who toil and carry burdens, aud who ask for so little in return. God bless them all! The very first item in tho creed of commonsense is Obedience. Per form your work with a whole heart Revolt may lie sometimes neces sary, but the man who tries to mix"! revolt and obedience is doomed to disappoint himself and everybody with whom he has dealings. To flavor work with protest Is to fall in the protest and fail In the work. When you revolt, why re volt climb, hike, get out, defy tell everybody and everything to go to hades! That disposes of the case. You thus separate yourself entirely from those you have served no oue misunderstands you you have de clared yourself. The man who quits in disgust when ordered to perform a task which he considers menial or unjust may bo a pretty good fellow; but the malcontent who takes your order with a smile, and then secretly dis obeys, is a dangerous proposition. To pretend to obey, and yet carry In your heart the spirit of revolt, Is to do half-hearted, slipshod work. If revolt and obedience aro equal in power, your engine will then stop on the center and you benefit no one, not even yourself. The spirit of obedience Is the con trolling impulse that dominates the receptive mind and the hospitable heart. There are boats that mind tho helm and there are boats that do not. Those that do not, get holes knocked in them sooner or later. To keep olf the rocks, obey tho rudder. Obedience Is not to slavishly obey this man or that, but It is that cheerful mental state which responds to the necessity of the case, and does the thing without any back talk uttered or expressed. Obedi ence to tho Institution loyalty! The man who has not learned to obey as trouble ahead of him every step of tho way. The world lias it In for him continually, becauso ho has it in for the world. Tho man who does not know how to receive orders is not fit to issue them to others. But the individual who knows how to execute the or ders given him Is preparing the way to issue orders, and better still to havo them obeyed. Thero Is known to me a prominent business house that by the very force of Its direct ncss and worth has managed to In cur tho enmity of many rivals. In fact, there is a very general conspir acy on hand to put tho institution down and out. In talking with a young man em ployed by this house, he yawned and said, "Oh, In this quarrel I am neu tral." "But you get your bread and butter from this firm, and In a mat ter where the very life of the Institu tion Is concerned, I do not see how you can be neutral." And he changed tho subject. I think that If I enlisted in the Japan ese army I would not be a neutral. Business is n Struggle. Business Is a fight a continual struggle Just, as life is. Man has reached his present degree of de velopment through struggle. Struggle there must be and al ways will be. Tho struggle began as purely physical. As man evolved It shifted ground to the mental, the psychic, and the spiritual, with a lew dashes of caveman proclivities still left. But depend upon it, the struggle will always be life is activity. Aud when It gets to bo a struggle in well-doing, it will still bo a struggle When inertia gets the better of you, It Is time to tele phone the undertaker. The only real neutral In this game of lifo is a dead one. Eternal vigilance Is not only the price of liberty, but of every other good thing. A business that is not safeguarded on every side by active, alert, attentive, vigilant men is gone. As oxygen is the disintegrat ing principle of life, working night and day to dissolve, separate, pull apart and dissipate, so there is something in business that continu ally tends to scatter, destroy and shift possession from this man to that. A million mice nibble otor nally at every business venture. The mice are not neutrals, and if enough employees in a business house are neutrals, the whole concern will eventually come tumbling about their ears. I like that order of Field-Marshal Oyama: "Give every honorable neutral that you find in our lines the honorable jiu-jitsu hikerino." Elbert Hubbard in The Philistine. THE 'TUSSOCK MOTH. To a correspondent from Ohio, who asked for delinlte directions for destroying the Tussock moth, which badly infested his trees last year, Professor II. A. Surface, State Zoo logist of Pennsylvania, said: "The Tussock moth, which is so injurious to shade trees, especially along streets, can be held In check by spraying with arsenate of lead, using about three pounds in fifty gallons of water, which is practical ly in the proportion of one ounce In each gallon. "Spray thoroughly, with any kind of an apparatus that will throw the liquid over the leaves as a spray, but be sure and do this while the moths or larvae are yet yoUng. At tho present time the Tussock moth is in the egg stage, in tho white egg masses seen on the trunks or branches of trees. The larvae crawled to such spot, and there shed its hairs, and spun its loose cocoon, making this of a few silken threads combined with spiny hairs. "Later the female moth came from the cocoon as a wingless creat ure, the males flying and mating. The eggs were then deposited upon the old cocoons, and covered with a kind of white froth, which hardened over them, and protected them, as we now find them. Along in May the little larvae or worms will conio from these eggs,- and commence feed ing on the foliage. "The best thing to do Is to gather these egg masses by hand now. Where this cannot be done, it is possible to reach them with a sponge on the end of a pole, dipping the sponge into kerosene, and being sure that each of the egg masses is well touched with tho oil. In order to color it so that you can see which have been treated as you go around the trees, It is a good plan to use lamp black in the kerosene oil. "If for any reason all of the egg masses are not removed or treated, and tho young should commence to feed on the foliage, it is Important io spray uiem with an arsenical poi son, just as soon as possible, because tho younger they are the easier they WAYNE COJttlON PLEAS: TRIAL LIST, JUNE 1, 1011. Smith vs. Brown. Tellep vs. Chapiak. Klausner vs. De Breun. Town vs. Cortrlght. M. J. HANI. AM Prnt'v Honesdale, Pa., May 29, 1911. 43eo3 FARMER BANK WITH US THE BANK FOR ALL CLASSES M, E. SIMONS, President The Farmers and Mechanics Bank Cor. Main and 1 0th St., HONESDALE LABORER $1 starts you with an account Open a savings account in your name and then see that you deposit some of your spending money in tho bank at intervals. Once establish the saving habit and gratifying results are certain. With the latest improved vault safe with time lock, fire proof vaults,, modern methods, and assured courteous treatment We Solicit a Share of Your Trade Bring your deposit In person, send moneyorder, express order, draft or send It with o friend. LAWYER are to kill, and also tho less damage they do to tho trees. If some of this material blows on the grass or lawn or upon the sidewalk, it will do no harm." 'HIE WAITER AND TIIE CELERY. The following story is told in tho Saturday Evening Post about Rhine lander Waldo who has just been ap pointed to the Police Commlssion ershlp of New York: One of tho lobster palaces on Broadway had bought an oversupply of celery and the waiters were given instructions to rush celery on every customer who would stand for It. Fire Commissioner Waldo came In with a friend. Tho waiter asked him what ho would have. "Some oysters," said Waldo. "And some celery?" suggested the waiter. "No, not a sprig. I don't want any celery. I want some chicken gum bo soup, strained." "With celery, of course," put In tho waiter. "No; I tell you I don't want any celery. And some shad." "With celery?" said the waiter. "No celery and a bit of the roast." "Some celery would go fine with that," said the waiter. "Forget tho celery! Now, what shall we have In the wny of a salad?" Some celery salad," suggested tho waiter. "Get out!" shouted Waldo, "and bring those oysters. If you put any celery in I'll make you eat It." The waiter brought tho oysters and again suggested celery, but was re 'buffed so earnestly ho stood around and cursed under his breath. After he had brought the coffee, Waldo saw the manager of the place. "Tom," he said, "come here a min ute." "What is it, .Mr. Waldo?" asked the manager. "Tom, haven't I been a good cus tomer of this place?" "None better, sir." "Then, why is it I can't get what I want?" "What is it you want, Mr. Waldo?" "Why, ever since I sat down I have been trying to get a little celery, but all to no avail. What's the matter with this restaurant? Haven't you got any celery? If not why don't you send out and get some?" During this recital the face of the manager changed from red to purple of that rare old apoplectic tinge. "Here, you!" he shouted to the waiter. "Why didn't you get Mr. Waldo some celery? What d'ye mean by that sort of thing? Get out of here " The waiter was too quick for him, however. As Waldo was talking, he took off his apron, threw it on the floor and said: "Celery, hey? Celery! Say, you! I done everything to get him to take celery but tyin" him to the chair an' gaggin' him wif it. Here's where I quit." "Where are you going?" asked" Waldo. "Gotn'?" repeated the waiter, with fine scorn. "Goin'? Why, I'm go in' crazy. No, I ain't; I'm gone al ready. Celery! elery! Who wants the celery waiter?" And he vanish ed into the night. ptOURT PROCLAMATION. Whereas, J the Judge of the several Courts of the County of Wayne has Issued his precept for holding a Court ot Quarter Sessions, Oyer and Terminer, and General Jail Delivery la and for said County, at the Court Bouse, to begin on v MONDAY. JUNE 19, 1911. X and to continue ono week: And directing that a Grand Jury for the Courts of Quarter Sessions and Oyer and Terminer ho summoned to meet on Monday, June 12. 1911. at 2 p. m. Notice is therefore hereby given to the Coroner and Justices of the Peace, and Con stables of the County of Wayne, that they be then and there la their proper persons, at said Court House, at 2 o'clock In the after noon of said 12th day of June. 1911. with their records. lnquisltlons,exa initiations and other remembrances, to do those things which to their otliccs appertain to he done, and those who are bound by recognizance or otherwise to prosecute the prisoners who are or shall he in the Jail of Wayne County, be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be Just. Given under my hand, at Honesdale, this 29th day of May 1911, and In the 13oth year of tho Independence of the United States Sheriff's OfllrR 1 Honesdale. -May 29 1911. f 43wl MECHANIC C, A. EMEItY, Cabiiif.ii MERCHANT DOCTOR